professor sir muir gray, co-director nhs qipp …...the third health care revolution: a new paradigm...
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The third health care revolution: A new paradigm for better value health care Professor Sir Muir Gray, Co-Director NHS QIPP Programme, Right Care Workstream – Department of Health, Director, Better Value Healthcare
- All health services worldwide, face five major problems: • patient harm • unwarranted variation in
– quality, safety and outcome – activity and cost
• inequalities and inequity • failure to prevent preventable disease • waste
2011
Need and demand
€
Carbon
Maximise value by allocating optimally
CANCER
RESPIRATORY
MSK
CANCER
RESPIRATORY
MSK
MENTAL HEALTH
Musculo-skeletal expenditure per 1000 population by PCT Weighted by age, sex, and need 2008/09
Mental health £M324-151/Million Circulation £M174-106
Medically unexplained physical symptoms
Homeless people
Children
Older people with four or more diagnoses
PROGRAMME BUDGETS 2009/2010 MILLION / MILLION POPULATION
225 Mental Health 160 CVD 117 Cancer 95 GU 95 MSK 92 Respiratory 92 GI 82 Neuro 74 Trauma 72 Maternity 70 Social 66 Dental
63 Learning Disabilty
58 Endocrine 42 Healthy 42 Skin 40 Vision 40 ID 28 Blood
21 Adverse Effects
10 Hearing 65 Other
PROGRAMME BUDGETS 2009/2010 MILLION / MILLION POPULATION
225 Mental Health 160 CVD 117 Cancer 95 GU 95 MSK 92 Respiratory 92 GI 82 Neuro 74 Trauma 72 Maternity 70 Social 66 Dental
63 Learning Disabilty
58 Endocrine 42 Healthy 42 Skin 40 Vision 40 ID 28 Blood
21 Adverse Effects
10 Hearing 65 Other
154 GP/PMS 92 SHA 226 Miscellaneous
Maximise value by using resources optimally
Higher value
Higher value
Higher value
Lower value
Lower value
Added value from doing things right (quality improvement + cost improvement )
Added value from doing the right things) making the right decisions
-
Unwarranted variation in quality, safety & outcome • patient harm • health inequalities • failure to prevent preventable disease
GOOD BAD
Unwarranted variation in activity and cost
Waste of resources
Higher value Lower value
Value = Outcomes/Costs
Outcome = Good – Bad
(Outcome= Effectiveness – Harm)
Costs = Money Costs = Carbon + Opportunity Lost
Examples of lower value activities are those which: 1. Have clear evidence that they are ineffective or that they do more harm than good.
2. Have no evidence of effectiveness but are not being delivered in
the context of research that would allow evidence to judge effectiveness to be gathered. 3. Use resources which would produce more value, namely a better balance of benefit to harm, if used for some other group of patients.
Cancers
MSK
Porosis OA/Joints
RA
MRI
Replacement
Arthro /washout
Respiratory
Rate of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction expenditure per 1000 population by PCT Weighted by age, sex and need, 2008/09
The variation among PCTs in the rate of expenditure for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction per 1000 population is 50-fold.
Cancers
MSK
Porosis OA/Joints
RA
MRI
Replacement
Arthro /washout
Respiratory
Cancers
MSK
Porosis OA/Joints
RA
MRI
Replacement
Respiratory
Ensuring no patient makes a fateful decision in avoidable ignorance
After a certain level of investment the health gain may start to decline:
The point of optimality
Benefits
Investment of resources
Harms
Benefits - harm
As the rate of intervention increases the balance of benefit and harm changes for the
individual patient
Low High Rate of Intervention
Benefit than can be expected
Probability and magnitude of harm
Evidence
The values this patient places on benefits and harms of the options
The clinical condition of this patient, other diagnoses and risk factors, and their social circumstances
Choice Decision
Value-based and shared decision-making
Prioritising action
Outcome
measures
• Vision:
Total sight tests per 10,000 population
AVERAGE SPEND
AVERAGE OUTCOME
LOWER SPEND, BETTER OUTCOME LOWER SPEND WORSE OUTCOME
HIGHER SPEND, BETTER OUTCOME HIGHER SPEND, WORSE OUTCOME
Working in systems and networks
A SYSTEM is a set of activities with a common set of objectives ( also known as a service) and an annual
report.
A NETWORK is a set of individuals and organisations that deliver the system’s objectives (a team is a set of individuals or departments within one organisation).
A PATHWAY is the route patients usually follow
through the network.
This is an example of a national service set up as a system
A SYSTEM is a set of activities with a common set of objectives (also known as a service) and an annual report; who is responsible for the annual report for asthma care for the population of Dusseldorf.
HIERARCHY
NETWORK
Practicing population
medicine
Dr Jones is a respiratory physician in the Brighton Hospital Trust and last year she saw 346 people with COPD. She hopes to provide evidence-based, patient-centred care, and to improve effectiveness, productivity and safety.
Dr Jones estimated that there are 1000 people with COPD in East Sussex and a population-based audit showed that there were 100 people who were not referred who would benefit : she needs to practise...
population medicine.
People who would gain most from the service
People with the condition
People receiving service
Dr Jones, the co-ordinator of the East Sussex COPD Network and Service, has responsibility, authority and resources (one day a week and support) for: - network development - localisation of the Map of Medicine - quality of patient information - professional development of generalists, and pharmacists - production of the annual report of the service.
She is keen to improve her performance from being 27 out of the 106 COPD services, and of greater importance, 6 out of the 23 services in the prosperous counties.
Thinking about the individual patient
Thinking about the population
1. Is the service for people with seizures & epilepsy in Manchester better than the service in Liverpool?
2. Who is responsible for the headache service for people in Newcastle?
3. How many liver disease services are there in England and how many should there be?
4. Which service for frail elderly people in the south west provides the best value?
5. Which mental health service in London for children with mental health problems improved most in the last year ?
CHANGE: Both the bureaucracy and the market have a part to play but what is needed are complex adaptive systems because health care is too complex to be managed through the market or bureaucracy alone.